Lesson 8 — Pop Music Theory & Arrangement

Theory is not a rulebook — it is a map of what already works.

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Functional Harmony

Tonic chords (I, vi, iii) feel like home. Subdominant chords (IV, ii) create movement. Dominant chords (V, vii°) create tension that wants to resolve home.

Melody & Bass

Strong melodies use chord tones on strong beats and passing tones on weak beats. Bass lines support chords, often with root–fifth patterns.

Arrangement & Energy

Arrangement changes texture over time: sparse verse, full chorus, contrasting bridge. The goal is an energy arc.

Song Arrangement Builder

Click sections to build a timeline. Click a block to remove it. See how many bars your song has and how long it would last at 128 BPM.

0 bars

🎧 Monakai Pro Tip

Arrangement is editing. The listener needs a change every 8 to 16 bars or they get bored. Strip parts out, then bring them back at the right moment.

← Chords & ProgressionsADSR Envelopes →

Key Takeaways

Practice This

Open your DAW and apply one idea from this lesson to a 16-bar loop. Don't worry about making a full track — just experiment until the concept feels natural in your hands.

Try Monakai's free VST3 plugins to hear these ideas in action, and check the music production blog for more tips.

Next Lesson

Keep learning: ADSR Envelopes